Dislocation as method

D. MacDougall
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Abstract

Research in the sciences, including the social sciences, is usually supposed to be conducted in a systematic way, working from research questions to the gathering of empirical data, to conclusions. But in an analogy drawn from the art of fencing, the author argues for an alternative approach in visual anthropology. Films look at the world differently from the ways we conventionally see, and these differences have optical, social, and structural origins. To overcome these differences, filmmakers may have to voluntarily ‘dislocate’ themselves in order to put themselves in a position to view their subject from a different perspective, and so uncover new knowledge. The argument is supported by a discussion of the realities of ethnographic fieldwork, the processes of filmmaking, and the role of play and improvisation in the arts and other human endeavours.
错位作为方法
科学研究,包括社会科学,通常应该以系统的方式进行,从研究问题到收集经验数据,再到结论。但是,在从击剑艺术中得出的类比中,作者主张在视觉人类学中采用另一种方法。电影看世界的方式与我们传统的方式不同,这些不同有光学的、社会的和结构的根源。为了克服这些差异,电影人可能不得不自愿“错位”自己,以便从不同的角度看待他们的主题,从而发现新的知识。这一论点得到了对人种学实地考察、电影制作过程、戏剧和即兴创作在艺术和其他人类活动中的作用的讨论的支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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